The Cedarville Herald, Volume 11, Numbers 22-52
TEMPERANCE notes . FA0T8 ABOUT*' BCSR. |*e Entire F r « «w «f M|UiM| the Stuff l i Exceedingly Filthy. guppOBewe take alook if*to a brewory, fia t wo wish to learn i|kMi*t brewers jtsnd wby they do i t itm a wore go b y to make beer iwe ataMld need- to ft every thing—in abort, to enter as Apprentices. I hope none o f my pupils Alt ever do that,K.-,\Ve d^ ^jipt propflaa tomake beer, but ^ exp o se its badness. We can learn *luoh by looking. You wduld hot* .isxpsot « to. ilud .a trewery a very clean place. Thero is too muoh dirty work done there, too much straining, and fermenting and waste. A vast jamount o f good grainds spoiled there.'"At the •Centennial Eb» position of 1876 in Philadelphia we were told that we could see the entire process o f beer-making at the Brewers’ Hall; so a party o f Temperance people went around. thera one day..... A nice large room contained a great variety of new utensils and machinery, all duly labeled, but none of It in operation. When we asked toi see ..the promised process of beer making, the ’Workmen .simply ran some discolored water through the mash tub. Why did they not keep their promise? Beqaus? thpre is too much dirty work about beer mak* ing, and they wished to make us think it was all very .glean and sweet.. We soon found, however, that the beer collar was expected to he the great attraction. Ev6n the workmen watohed for the opening o f the door into that, so, that they .might dodge in and get a drink. Wo declined the privilege, hut when they assured us we would not be urged to drink, we walked In and looked around , tho cold dark damp room, andsaw people with glasses in their hands going around to ge't drinks from great glootny-looking hogs heads. Much pains were taken to keep this clean also, but there was nothing cherry nor attractive aboutit. Andthere was very little to learn, excepting the strength of the appetite created by beer drinking. In the real brewery we w ill also re fuse the drink; and we will be careful to avoid the moldy utensils, and to keep our footing on the slimy floors. Lotus look first at tho mash tub, where the crushed grain is, washed out in hot water. Men keep stirring it up by ma chinery or with long poles, so that the liquid can-pass through the. perforated bottom. This liquid is called the “ sweot wort,” because it is not yet fermented. When It is drawn off from the mash tub it is run into the boilers. Where are they? All built up in ranges with brick-work. Beneath them are the places.to build the fires. Over eaoh boiler is the machinery that turns tho handle o f a rake, which reaches into the boiler and stirs up. the sediment at tbe bottom, Hops are now put into the liquid, to make the beer bitter and store stupefying, and to bide the nau seous taste o f the docayod grpin. The boiling goes on for some'hours, partly to get all the strongth out of tho hops and partly to curdle some nutri tious parts o f the grain that still re main in the wort Tfiesoareall strained #ut after the boiling is finished, and 'ifo brew is poured out on the floor of a largo room to cool. This word brew at first meant to boil, and it was applied to beer-making- on account of this boiling, .but now is is applied to tho wholo process of boor- making. No alcohol is developed yet, hut carotul preparations havo been made by removing from the wort nearly all parts of tho grain but the sugar. Wbon the wort has cooled it is run into largo vats that hold a hogshead or two, and the yeast is put in, about one gallon to one hundred gallons of the wort. Within a few hours tho sugar begins to decay, and'the alcohol is form ing. That is the way in which all alcohol is formed, by the decay of the sugar In a sweet liquid: and hero we have seen how it is done in beer-mak ing. This is the great object, to pro* luce this alcohol. Without this the beer would not sell. No one would drink It. The entire process is filthy. Very llthy water is often used to make the wort. The fermenting vats look filthy, with the dirty foam piled up so high that the workmen call it “rocks.” The •dorof decay is in the air. You can •mell that and the hops throughout all theneighborhood. The workmen look llthy, too. They are usually lorera of beer, and they get all they want to drink, William Lill, a brewer of Chicago, whosebuildings were burned down in thefamous fire, said hs should net re- bnild, because he cohid not keep his workmen sober. He said the curse he- pmin the brewery itself, where every workmanwas a beer barrel in themom- taganda barrel of beer at night. The staff that comes from the brewery is ho baiter for other people than it is for the wptkman, We wish all the brewers *ite as sensible a * Mr, Lill, hot so long is people will hare beer somebody will befound filthy enough to thake it— -fanperance Teaekar. WOMElTWHO DRINK. **f»IMe Effect* efiST tiaW t Upon Their gives,' ' Ofall the blistering sights on earth, *e worst is a drunken woman. Now then yon can sen one in a certain fsrtof the town, hut these are cursed a depravity that shows even ner than does their Inebriety, The 1thing shout an intoxicated woman; that when3rer yon ace one you re- **»ber her, It is a sight that does lit retdily lade from the mind. It is so out o f all lines o f propstaty, « f do- oonoy, of humanity that it appalls with its very outrageousnesa. No matter what if man may claim are his views on the subjeet of warafett he always proves his faith in her superior truth and purity by standing aghast at the sight Qf her maudlin condition. It proves b it* high l u lls ideal when he can look iH& ts statqlu a woman with toolings no more akin to those in the'case o rw man than atheism is like religion. It is because Jhe holds her higher, respects ’jtier mffiref^gives her 'instinctively full iaealurfM honor, tltht h# feels, shocked .and outraged, When ' she sinks tho far os to pollute that purity. * 1 ’ Every now and then a sensational writer stirs a ripple of attention b f tolling of tlje alarming prevalence of th* drinking habit among women. At a matter of fact, it is a custom that never.should, by-the wildest stretch of malice, be called prevalent. When a woman does become intoxicated ltseoma that all the world knows it. So rare and surprising, a thing is bruited abroad like the fall of . a priest or the misstep o f a clergyman. In our very surprise* and attention to it ws confess that It is unusual and un expected. Men in soolety may he drunk as lords onoe a month, and all their ,friends may kn ow o f .it; yet nothing la said of it which can. or does harm them in the delicate eBteom of the world. But just one lapse of this sort on the part of a woman is remembered against her forever; and men who hear her spokon o f associate this record against her the very first thing that eaters their mind. She is blasted for all time, andcan. no more wipe out .tho stain than could Lady Macbeth erase the proof of her terrible crime. But women do drink. It seems to be the last stage in a long, downward course. Inebriety unhidden Is her very last step. There Is no resting beyond that. Once over the line that bounds the land o f sobriety sbo is gone irre deemably. There seems no poscue for her,- A ll her grace Is gone! All that was once beauty has turned to hideous offensiveness.' All that was gentle and kind is rudely vicious, brazenly cruel. Now and then a policeman'picks one up late at night in some out-of-the-way place and brings her to the armory. She is unloaded with the roughness male prisoners know, tempered a trifle, simply because she is less likely to es cape. She is never still, sb some men are when in their cups, but' seems to feel her degradation so fully that si lence will drive her to thinking about it till insanity shall ensue. Mho talks constantly, employing language Bile never knew before, however low she sank. She seems to repel the faintest prompting of decent, womanly bohavior and to criiBh With all tho vileness she has heard in years each instinctive prompting to ho true,—Chicago Herald. Bad Example*. A missionary in India writes as fol lows concerning tho effect upon their work of drinking by English and Amer icans, who are all counted as Christiana by the natives. Frequently converts, who did not dare touch liquor while be longing to their own caste, on becom ing Christians feel freo to indulge in the habit. They say: “ English Chris tians drink, Christians smoke, why Bhould not we?” and tho, missionaries' mouths aro closed. Tbe effect of liquor upo.i these pooplo, and the in creasing amount used by them, is some thing fearful. Bosides the drinking, thero are several-substances smoked by the natives which aro as pernicious and far more rapid in results than alcohol ics. A strong pica comes to us for one o f our best women to go to India and re main several years to train workers. “ Sond a good woman who will- devote all bar time and energies to this work for a few years. Thero aro many here who could help, hut they can not lead.” Mrs. Loavltt makes a pica in the same line. Her plan is to have the women come hero to be trained in our train ing-school that Is to be.—Union Signal. One Step Towards tho Goal, The British Medical Journal sounds a note of alarm at tho threatened destruc tion of the Greek Nation by alcohol— that arch enemy of all mankind. The history o f the attempt of the Hellenio people to stay the ravages of strong drink is an .extremely interesting and pathetic one. The Athenian law giver, Draco, sentenced drunktrds to death, Plttaeus Ordained that drunk enness should entail a doable crime. Locrtan sustained the same legislation, making an exception for those who,had the authority of a physician's prescrip tion, Dr, Joannes Phnstanos is advo cating the formation of Temperance (moderate drinking) societies on this classic ground. This is one stop, but a very short one, towards the goal—total abstinence, T he theory that whisky is necessary in the treatment o f pneumonia has re ceived a blow from Dr. Bull, of New York City, who discovers that in the New York hospitals sixty-five per cent, o f the pneumonia patients d ie with al coholic treatment, while in London, at the Object Lesson Temperance Hospi tal, only five per cent, die.—Scientific American._______' A S panish Temperance newspaper is published at Valparaiso, Chili. Recent numbers contain articles on “ Alcohol and DiseaseH and “ Why Does Drink Cause Death?” Record is given o f tho organisation o f tho third Bpanish-speak- ihg lodge o f Good Templars, formed in thatnity. ■ A T ouoxto paper Hgures out that the drunkards of that city lost $191,6811 in wages last year. e - .Haw’d m ist We oner One Hundred Dollars Reward for any caso of Catarrh that can not he cured by taking Hall's Catarrhpure. J*. J. C heney & Co., Props., Toledo, O. We, the undersigned, have known P, J. Cheney for tho lastIlfteenyears, andbelieve him perfectly honorable in alt business transactions, and financially able to carry VUUlU|$i AII1UIIU W *1* Druggists, Toledo, Ohio.. . Ball’s Catarrh Cure is taken Internally, actingdirectly on theblood andmucoussur- faces of the system. Testimonials freo. Price, 75c. per bottle, Bold by all Druggists. Tnr-na’s a new newspaper in Kansas calledJHmri andEggs; It should never ap pear oftoner than once a week. Pub lished every Fried day probably, D eserving qf C onfidence .—There I s no article which bo richly deserves the entire confidence of the community as B rown ' s BRONcnuu T roches . Those suffering from Asthmatic and Bronchial Diseases, Coughs, and Colds should try them, Price 35 cents. •T h av « no grudge against fat people,'* said the steamship agent, “ but I always give them a wide, berth if I can.” —Tho Rackot , . ■, Mr friend, look here! you know howweak andnervous your wife is, andyou know that Carter’s Iron Pills will relieve her. Now why not be fair about It and buy her a box) Tax fanner's poultryfias one advantage over the owner—It is always sureef a crop. —Lowell Courier. A ctors , Vocalists, Piiblto Speakerspraise Hale's Honey of Horahoundand'far. - Pike's Toothache Drops cure In one minute. A fin * sleeping-oar costs About <18,00(1 Such cars ore not owned by the porters.— N. O. Picayune. N othino is half so rough on aman as a two days’ beard, unless it is his new under, clothing.—Elmira Gazette W hen Noah's ark lit on Mount Ararat after the flood it was the first arc-light cn record.—PhiladelphiaTimes. L ook sheepish—Old lambs. C ourage —Strength of heart,— Judge. I dol all the day Icing—Chinese images. A uort apparel—Wrapped In thought A landmark —“This property for tala'* ' U stjai . lt marry for money—Clergymen. A burning question—“ Where’s the firel” —N, Y. Moil and Express. , A. business man is never putout by a puff. —Boston Gazette, A oow never faints, but she frequently turns paiL—N, Y. Journal I t ' s a cold day when a henpecked man It not in hot water,—Ram'a Horn. T he sea hasa net population of several thousandmillions.—Washington Star. W hen a married moonshiner dies his widow can keep a secret still.—Pittsburgh Dispatch- T hough nothingis the mutterwith aman's hands, they can't bo nil right.—Drake's Magazine. F rom tho time a boy puts on his first pair of pants until tlio day of tils death there is a .woman trying to keep him at homa— Atchison Globe, . . .. “ B unker H im . Monument Pants” is the heading of an advertisement. We never saw the Bniiker illll Monument pant, but the neoplo that climb to the top of it gen erally do.—N, Y. Ledger. D on ’ t always judge by external appear - ances. An unpaid wash bill will mako one’s pocket bulge out ^us much ns a thousand dollar note.—Munsoy's Weekly, “ Au,” exclaimed the moth, as the house wife swatted him when slio found him In her husband’s woolen overcoat. “ I am caught napplngat last” —Boston Traveller. Tan thermometer is opo of thoso lucky tilings that enn keep taking a drop without A'Wug drunk.—St. Joseph flews. - A ffS.30 .P»p«r lb* *1.75, . T he Y outh ’ s C ompanion gives so much forth? small amount that, it costs it Is no wonder it is taken already in nearly Half a Million Families. With its line paper and beautiful illustrations, its Weekly Illus trated Supplement?, and its Double Holiday Numbers, it seemsus if the publisherscould not db enough to please, By sending <178 npw you may obtain it free to Jnnuary, and for a full year from, that date to January, 1803.' Address, T he Y outh ' s C ompanion , Boston, Mass. « • »■ ■ “I t ’ s my turn now!” as the dago'* wife said' when, she relieved him at the hand- organ.—BostouTravellcr. 't ’*•! -U'f ““ 1...* ■ Ba On Timet Excellent advice always, Adopt it in the treatment of kidney and bladder Inactivity, and you will avoid danger. Healthfully, but moderately, itnpci these organs, if Slug gish, to act by the use o f Hostetter’s Stom ach Bitter*, no less a diuretic than a tonic and general alterative. Don't forget, also, tho timely aid it affordswhenmalarial, llyer and rheumatic complaints' manifest them* selves. •• ' ___ ' A ntdodt could tell that the reason why :clocks get. Into the penitentiary is to do time.—Buffalo Express. Is it economy to-save a few cents buying a cheap soap or strong washing powder, and lots dollar* in ruined rotted clothes? If not, use Dobbins’ Electric Soap«.wbite os snow, and as pure. Ask your grocer for it F or every Industrious man there is an idle one wanting to borrow money of him.— Atchison Globe. B iliousness , dizziness, nausea, headache, are relieved by small doses of Curler’s Lit tle Liver Pills. . S ome anglers assert that keen-sighted- ness of a troutis due to his “ specks.”—Bos ton Courier._______________ T he best cough medicine Is Piso’s Cura for Consumption. Sold everywhere. 25c. - A n athlete strong enough to break a pair of oars must have a robust frame.—N. O. Picayune. , M aher ft Gnosn, Toledo, Ohio, are thor oughly reliable and will do as they agree. “ A ctions speak louder than words,” un less you happen to be using the telephone), peumatism -Sfcumcft. J ^URALGt** ■E&MSHORHS * "siiLF-ACTINfi SHADEROLLERS. r BewarsofImitation*, „ ft __ ’ NOTICE • AUTOGRAPH / / / . X ^ L A BEL y. OF uman f i GENUINE i » -utus uuDixs ALLCOVSTBRa. i i r n n E D t r cm i* DKEN’S CUILUKEN. H w H i »f j m *( aca aa* araaua la Ua V . S. A . e v , IliH fU t >*aa* Uwlrfctallh an* lA«irkaKtotM la K JIn ’i FotA tM r Callr fllet la la lh a ry _ _aa4ChlMhaa4fcatiatke«t ■S m * F ocd. Sr Dnnlria root UOOMaUap, WliOI.HICH IV A OH, Fabacr.Maaa. | A S T H M A £ U R E B I ^ E N S I O N - - 9 , - w *” OR“ ,? , The people at the World’s Dispensary o f Buffalo, N. Y ., have a slock*taking time once ; a year and what do you think i they d o? Count the number o f bottles that’ve been re turned by the men and women who say that Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery or Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescrip tion didn't do what they said it would do. And how many do you think they have to count. One in ten ? N o t one in fiv e hundred / 1 Here are two remedies— one the Golden Medical Dis covery, for regulating and in vigorating the liver and purify ing the b lood ; the other, the hope o f weakly womanhood, land they’ve been sold for years, sold by the million bot tles; sold under a p ositiv e gu aran tee, and not one in five hundred can say: “ It was not the medicine for me!” And— is there any reason why you should be the one? And—supposing you are what do you lose ? Absolutely nothing t P C t l V O V l lW a a h t n s i o n , I». C. * Sticossafully PROSEOUTEE CLAIMS. 1 a ( i Principal Examiner 0. 0, PeaiUn Bureau, tyr*Jnlaqt war,l?adjtidtaitinftc<AUutf,ati/aince, itjiaminu rmtiwr hm FORSALE a t a Bargain? EightyAcresLAUD In I’rlra Countr. Wi». For particular* applr to U, 11.srcsD. oiw BLctF-aerentasu,KoslsjroodJlL O P T O E N J O Y S Both the method and results when Syrup ofFigeiatakeu; itispleaBant and refreshingto the taste, andnete gentlyyetpromptly on the Kidneys, ’ Liver and Bowels, cleauseo the sy»- tem effectually, dispels colds, head* Echas and fevers and cures habitual constipation. Syrup o f Figs is .the only remedy o f its kind ever pro- duced, pleasing to tho tasto ana ao* ceptable to the stomach, prompt in its action and truly beneficial inlts effects, prepared only from the most hesJthy and agreeable substances, its many excellent qualifies oom- mend it to all and have made it the most popular remedy known, Syrup o f Figs Is for sale in 60o and $1 bottles by all leading drug gists. Any reliable druggist who may not have it on hand will pro cure it promptly for any ope who wishes to try i t D o not accept any substitute. CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. SAN FRANCISCO. CAL lOUISVIUS. n . NEVJ WBK. N.r. V A B E I L l I N E , . F OB ONE DOLLAR scut us by mail; wc vriU deliver, free of ail charges, to any personla tbe United States, all tho followtag articles carefully packed in a neat box: On* two ounce bottle ot Pure'Vaseline, XOota, One two ooaca bottle Vaseline Pomade. 15 “ OneJur of VaselineCold Cream.,...,.... U " One cake or VasollncCamphorIce. ....;. 10 •* One cakeor Vaseline Soap, unscented.., 10 “0 ■One cakeof VaselineSoap,sceated....... K '* - One two ounce bottle of WhiteVaselineW “ ■ ■■ — n.n Orfor stampsanysinglearticleat the prloe. U you have occasion to use’ Vaseline in any form bo careful to accept only genuine goods put up by us in original packages. A great many druggists are trying to persuade buyers to tako VASELINE put up by them. NoVet yield to such persuasion, os the article Is as imitationwithout value, andwill not give you the result you expect. A bottle of Blue Seal Vaseline is sold by all druggists at ten cents. Gkesehrottgk F f ’r. Co., 21 Stats 8L, New rk. M-aanamsvariHw«,<to.^*«Mt. ’ GRATEFUL-COMFORTING. EPPS’S COCOA BREAKFAST. "Brathoroneb knowledge of th# natural laws whichgovernthe operations ot digestion and nutrition. and by a careful application of tbe nns roperttes of well-selected Cocoa. Mr. Epps has. rovlded our breakfast tables with a delicately lybuiltupuntil atrong enoughto resisteveryt dencyto disease, llundrcdaofentitlemaladiesi floauns aroundu*ready to attackwhereverthi tfdfftl#**’ Made simply with boiling water or milk. Bold onlyInhalf-poundtine,by(Irocera.labelledtime: JAMESEPPSAGO., Hommopstfcto Chtmisif, iondon, En|taML BOREWELLS!“ OarWellMcrhlnc* are tkemot HRiJARL*,Dcium.r,«t'rcKr.»niL THejritottttifKW oijk «nd nUtUKKATKR PIIOFIT. TheyFINIRKIWell#where others FAIL! Any alee, 8 iBcatatoit inchesdiameter. LOOMIS & NYMAN, TIFFIN, - OHIO. apM*inMriR*mrMtn<Ria 5 An elegant a i l naeflal CSrlUnst airt.! <eDUNLAP PEN CO., BOSTON, MASS, araaiie tms rarts «eyee.i*si»a W*MM.DM. IttSiS. kwk. STAMPS. firadlillwWerid’aFal* IVVBIBaOT1»IMSB<0 si«u eaitMA mis vat m mws in* m ATARRH THE POS IT IVE CURE. XLTBROTHERS,MWtaM*»UNewYork. Tricetdcte.1 j price Ms, ear pricefer awhile EWj.Sew.rswe a n l Made NoADVANCEonACCOUNT ofTARIF, arcissw _ _______ 111! n u in ilU b WII nuwwu ill Wl i n i l l l l ) Ueat'snasSblade.tl; bcy'skblade, 3 * et*.|_lad pearl. *c, pruning, JScj bedding. Me: grafting, S eentsi Marh beat steel snean, H eeata. s r ic r ’ - J —— ' nrriUtl Thi*kalfeandJlackahean,noetpald, Sl.i AO /w Hellewground rater,It Mi beat atn • t o w «.ermade,Ms. 1------ TRATEPMSTI and **n o w T « t * L KHWH.” / ■ si H ^ Msbsrft I m l i t BSIlrsM, aarXttU! 1H U M e tK .m , if PESO’S REMEDY FOR CATARRH—Best Kufesttem . * '•Cbespegt Belief is imwadrtf*. A curs is oeruia. For Cold in theHead ithasnoequal. Q A T A R R H It Isan Wntoent, of which a snudl particle Is Applied to the DoftrtU. Fries,SOc. ficklbydnwrKtsorsenttytnS'll. __ Addrais, R .T . H azxihinu , Warn*. 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